Poland launches operational satellite reconnaissance system MikroSAR in strategic leap for Baltic security

Poland has formally entered a new era of sovereign space-based intelligence. On 15 May 2026, the Polish Armed Forces officially received the MikroSAR satellite radar reconnaissance system, giving Warsaw independent access to all-weather, day-and-night Earth observation capabilities critical for military and maritime security in the Baltic region.

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15 may 2026   |   15:07   |   Source: Gazeta Morska   |   Prepared by: Kamil Kusier   |   Print

fot. MON

fot. MON

The handover ceremony took place at the Polish Army Museum in Warsaw, attended by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Defence Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz and Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk.

The system was delivered by ICEYE Polska, leading a consortium that also includes Military Communication Works No.1, part of the Polish Armaments Group.

From contract signature to operational readiness in just 12 months

MikroSAR is widely regarded as one of the fastest executed defence procurement programs in modern Polish military history.

The contract, signed on 14 May 2025 and valued at approximately PLN 860 million gross, includes three radar satellites with an option for three more, alongside a mobile ground segment.

Within just one year, four SAR satellites were launched into orbit, while the newly established Agency for Geospatial Intelligence and Satellite Services (ARGUS) achieved operational readiness.

- Our geospatial imaging capabilities, our preparedness for the most difficult scenarios, and our ability to influence strategic awareness are becoming reality here and now, said Defence Minister Kosiniak-Kamysz during the ceremony.

Such delivery speed is notable by European standards and reflects Poland’s accelerating defence modernization cycle.

Major implications for Baltic maritime security

For the maritime sector, MikroSAR’s strategic significance extends well beyond traditional military intelligence.

Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) technology enables persistent monitoring regardless of cloud cover, darkness, or adverse weather conditions—particularly relevant in the Baltic Sea, where meteorological limitations often constrain conventional optical surveillance.

The new system strengthens Poland’s capabilities in:

  • monitoring naval and commercial vessel movements,
  • protecting offshore energy assets, including wind farms and LNG infrastructure,
  • detecting sabotage, hybrid threats, and unauthorized activity in the Polish Exclusive Economic Zone,
  • supporting targeting and operational planning for naval and missile systems.

MikroSAR effectively adds a sovereign space layer to Poland’s maritime domain awareness architecture.

Space becomes an operational domain for Poland

The Polish Ministry of National Defence has increasingly emphasized that future warfare will be shaped by emerging technologies.

- Our true priorities today are drones, counter-drone systems, artificial intelligence, space, and long-range precision strike capabilities, Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz stated.

The official activation of ARGUS marks Poland’s institutional move into operational military space activities, including satellite tasking, geospatial intelligence processing, and support for modern weapons systems.

This positions Poland among a small group of European nations with national operational radar satellite capabilities.

Public-private defence cooperation as a scalable model

A notable aspect of the MikroSAR program is the cooperation model between private space industry and state-owned defence companies.

ICEYE Polska, operating as consortium leader, partnered with state-controlled defence entities to deliver a fully operational capability on an accelerated timeline.

Deputy Minister Cezary Tomczyk described the cooperation as exemplary.

- This cooperation between private industry and the state defence sector is a model for future strategic programs. Poland is entering an entirely new domain: space, he said.

For the maritime and offshore industries, the program may also create downstream opportunities in vessel monitoring, infrastructure surveillance, environmental observation, and security analytics.

Strategic signal to the region

The operationalization of MikroSAR sends a broader geopolitical message: Poland is rapidly expanding beyond traditional land-based defence toward integrated multi-domain capabilities.

In the Baltic security environment—defined by critical infrastructure vulnerabilities, hybrid threats, and heightened military activity—independent satellite reconnaissance is no longer a technological luxury, but a strategic necessity.

With MikroSAR now under military control, Poland has moved decisively into the space-enabled defence era, strengthening both national resilience and regional maritime security architecture.

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Kamil Kusier
redaktor naczelny

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